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  • Algarve Summer: Bass, Bream, and Calm Seas—Dawn and Dusk Bite Windows
    2026/06/23
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Algarve fishing report. We’ve got classic summer conditions along the south coast tonight into tomorrow: light northerly breezes easing offshore, clear skies, and warm, stable weather. Local marine forecasts are calling for calm seas, a gentle swell under a meter, and air temps running mid‑teens at night up into the high‑20s by afternoon along Faro, Albufeira, Portimão, and Lagos. Tides along the Algarve are on a mid‑range cycle, with a decent push of water on both the flood and the ebb. Expect low water in the early morning, a strong incoming building fish activity toward mid‑morning, then another good window again on the last of the afternoon drop. Sunrise is around half past five, with first usable light just before that, and sunset close to half past eight, giving you a long, workable crepuscular bite at both ends. These conditions have been kind to both shore and boat anglers. Along the surf beaches from Vilamoura to Albufeira and out toward Armação and Meia Praia, anglers have been finding good numbers of sardine‑chasing predators just outside the first bar at dawn and dusk. Recent reports from local tackle shops say school‑size **palhaço / European sea bass (robalo)** have been active, with the odd better fish mixed in, plus **palometas, chub mackerel, and horse mackerel** from the piers and harbor walls at night. Offshore charters out of Albufeira, Portimão, and Lagos have been putting clients on bottom species: **bream, snapper, small grouper, and the usual mix of reef fish**, with some **bluefish and bonito** showing when the bait balls push in tight. Best bite windows have been the first hour of light and the last hour before dark, especially when those periods line up with a turning tide. On the bright, calm midday period, fish are still there, but you’ll need lighter leaders and more natural presentations. Lure anglers chasing robalo from the rocks and beaches are doing well with: - Slim **topwaters** and **pencils** at grey light, worked with a slow walk‑the‑dog. - **Shallow‑diving minnows** in natural sardine or anchovy patterns. - **Soft plastics** on light jig heads in 10–20 g, pearl, white, or ayu, slow‑rolled just above the bottom. For bait fishing, keep it simple and fresh: - **Sardine strips** and **whole sardine** for anything toothy and aggressive. - **Ragworm and lugworm** for bream and smaller reef species. - **Squid and cuttlefish strips** when the pickers are thick and you want something tougher that stays on the hook. Two hotspots to keep on your radar right now: - **Lagos / Ponta da Piedade area**: Fish the rocky ledges and channels on a rising tide at dawn with minnows and soft plastics for robalo and bluefish, then switch to bait rigs down the sides for bream and smaller reef fish once the sun’s up. - **Portimão / Praia da Rocha and river mouth**: The mix of river flow and ocean tide has been concentrating bait. Early‑morning lures along the outer wall and beach for bass and mackerel, then night sessions with sardine or squid on the bottom rigs can produce a busy basket. As always, mind the swell on the rocks, watch that wet black algae, and keep an eye on the sets. The fish will still be there tomorrow; no need to risk it for one more cast. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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    4 分
  • Algarve Early Summer: Bass, Bream, and Dawn Light on the South Coast
    2026/06/22
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Algarve fishing report. We’ve got classic early-summer conditions along the south coast today. Light to moderate northerlies over most of the day, easing near dawn and dusk, with clear to partly cloudy skies and warm air pushing well into the 20s. The ocean is calm to a slight chop along the usual marks from Vila Real de Santo António all the way to Sagres. First light is around a quarter past five, with sunrise shortly after. Sunset slips just before nine in the evening, giving those long golden hours the Algarve is famous for. Low light is your prime window: crack of dawn and last light into the first hour of darkness are when the better fish have been most active along the beaches and rocky points. Tides are running in a moderate cycle: a decent morning flood pushing bait tight to the shore, then an afternoon ebb that’s been clearing the water nicely on the open beaches. Around the mid-flood into the first of the ebb has been the sweet spot for most of the week, especially on the reefs and along the river mouths. Recent reports from local skippers and shore anglers around Albufeira, Portimão, and Lagos talk about steady action on **robalo** (European sea bass) and **dourada** (gilt-head bream), with a mix of smaller **sargos**, **choupas**, and the odd better **corvina** coming at night from deeper marks and harbour walls. Nothing crazy in size for bass, but plenty of fish in the 40–55 cm bracket, and a few proper ones taken in the surf after dark. For lures, it’s been a hard‑bait game at first light. Slim minnows in natural sardine and mackerel patterns, 11–15 cm, are producing well over the sandbars and along rocky points. Soft plastics on 10–20 g jig heads in white, pearl, or olive have been deadly when the water is a bit clearer, especially on the inner reefs. Topwater pencils and walk‑the‑dog stickbaits are worth a go in the glassy dawn on the beaches for those explosive bass strikes. If you’re fishing bait, bring **fresh sardinha**, **camarão** (shrimp), and **casulo** or **americano** worms. Sardine chunks and fillets for bass and corvina at night, worms and shrimp for bream on lighter rigs. Keep it simple: long fluorocarbon traces, small but strong hooks, and just enough lead to hold bottom in the surf. A couple of hot spots to consider: – The stretch between **Praia da Falésia and Vilamoura**, working the first and second gutters on a flooding tide at dawn with minnows and soft plastics for bass, or worm baits for bream. – The rocky points and ledges around **Ponta da Piedade, Lagos**, especially on the making tide into sunset. Rotate between diving minnows, soft plastics, and natural baits; this area often throws up the better fish when there’s a bit of swell and colour in the water. Night owls should look to the harbour walls at Portimão and Olhão on the top of the tide with sardine baits for a shot at corvina and better bass, but stay safe and watch that footing. That’s the Algarve report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next session. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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    3 分
  • Algarve Fishing Report: Warm Settled Stretch, Evening Tides Firing, Bass and Bream On
    2026/06/21
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Algarve fishing report. We’ve just come off the back of a warm, settled stretch along the south coast. Light north–northwesterly breeze through the day, easing toward the evening, with clear to partly cloudy skies and a calm to slight sea along the main beaches from Vila Real de Santo António to Sagres. Air temps have been running mid‑20s°C by afternoon, dropping nicely after sunset, and the barometer’s been steady – all good signs for consistent fish activity. Tides on this cycle are giving us a decent morning flood and a solid evening push; the strongest movement has been around the late afternoon into dusk, which has really switched the bite on along the rock marks and river mouths. Sunrise is early, first light creeping in well before most folks are out of bed, and sunset is late, giving a generous golden-hour window for topwater and light‑lure work off the stones and beaches. Inshore, the usual Algarve suspects have been active: plenty of smaller **robalo** (European seabass) tight to the surf line on the sandy beaches, with better fish coming off the rockier points and harbor walls when the light is low. Gilthead bream (**dourada**) and a few **sargos** have been showing over broken ground and near reefy patches, especially on the last of the flood. Closer to structure and marinas, **palmeta** and other smaller bream have kept light-tackle anglers busy, with the odd surprise mullet taking bread or small bits of shrimp. Offshore boats working out of Albufeira, Vilamoura and Portimão have seen mixed bags: **cavala** (mackerel), **carapau** (horse mackerel), some bonito and the first talk of better pelagic life pushing in a bit deeper. Nothing crazy, but enough action to keep the decks messy and the coolers respectably full. Lure-wise, the locals have been leaning on the usual Algarve staples. For robalo at dawn and dusk, slim **surface walkers** and **poppers** in natural baitfish patterns have done damage over the shallow sandbars and around river mouths. As the sun climbs, switching to **sinking minnows** and **metal jigs** in the 20–40 g range has picked off fish holding a bit deeper. On the bream, small **soft plastics** on light jig heads and tiny **metal spoons** have worked well where the water is clear and calm. For bait fishing, classic Algarve tactics are still king: fresh or live **sardinha**, **choco** (cuttlefish), **camarão** (shrimp) and strips of **calamar** on simple running rigs. Dourada have been taking crab and shellfish baits over clean sand near channels, while sargos can’t resist a well-presented shrimp or mussel along rough ground. At night, a strip of sardine wafting in the current has produced both bass and bream for those willing to stay late. If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots to focus on: - The **Arade River mouth and Portimão jetties** have fished well on the evening tide, with bass working the current edges and bream tight to the rocks. - The **rocky points around Lagos and Ponta da Piedade** have been reliable for dawn and dusk lure sessions, especially on a pushing tide with just a bit of swell to stir things up. Keep things light, move until you find bait and current, and don’t be afraid to swap between lures and bait if the fish get picky. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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    3 分
  • Algarve Fishing Report: Dawn and Dusk Gold for Bass, Bream, and Bluefish
    2026/06/20
    This is Artificial Lure with your Algarve fishing report. Along the south coast today, we’ve had a settled Atlantic pattern: light north to northwest breeze most of the day, building a bit in the afternoon, then easing toward evening. Skies have been mostly clear with just some high cloud, and air temps sitting in the low to mid‑20s Celsius on the beaches, a touch cooler at first light and after dark. Sea state has been friendly for small boats and kayaks: low swell around a metre or less, a gentle roll on the more exposed west-facing points. Tides are running on the smaller side, closer to neaps than big springs. That means more modest current in the rias and around the points, but still enough movement to trigger bites on the top and bottom of the cycle. Most shore anglers did best working the **first light flood** and the **last of the evening ebb**, especially where you get a bit of structure and some wash. Sunrise came early over the eastern horizon, around a quarter past five, with sunset falling just after nine in the evening. That long golden window at both ends of the day has been the key for the more pressured marks. Inshore, the usual Algarve suspects have been cooperative. From Albufeira through Vilamoura and down toward Tavira, surf casters and rock‑hoppers reported **sargo (white seabream)**, **dourada (gilt‑head bream)** and some **robalo (sea bass)**. Numbers weren’t crazy, but enough fish to keep you honest: a handful of legal bass in the 40–55 cm range on each well‑worked tide, with plenty of smaller schoolies mixed in. Bream catches have been better where there’s broken rock and a bit of weed; the more featureless beaches were slower in the middle of the day. The bait game is still strong. **Fresh sardine strips**, **lugworm**, and **rock crab** put the most fish on the sand. For the dourada, a small crab or a well‑presented clam did the trick. Sea bass have been taking whole small sardines and livebait where available. At night, a simple two‑hook paternoster with sardine or mackerel has been enough for mixed bream and the odd ray on the deeper beaches. Lure anglers had fun working the dawn and dusk edges. Slim **minnow plugs** in natural sardine or mackerel patterns, **soft‑plastic shads** on light jig heads, and **topwater walkers** over shallow reefs all produced bass and the occasional bluefish. The clearer the water, the more a subtle, natural‑coloured lure outfished the loud stuff; in the bit of evening chop, a white or bone topwater stood out nicely. Offshore and around the reefs, small boats and charters reported **horse mackerel**, **Atlantic mackerel**, **bonito**, and some **dentex** and **corvina** on the deeper structure. Slow‑pitch jigs in pink/silver and blue/silver, as well as traditional metal jigs in the 40–80 g range, were the better producers. A few boats running a bit wider picked up small **tuna** and **skipjack** on trolled feathers and diving plugs, especially along temperature breaks. If you’re planning a trip, a couple of hot spots stood out: - **Armação de Pêra to Praia da Galé**: Good early‑morning surf‑casting for bass and bream, especially where the sandbars meet rocky patches. Fish the first push of the flood with sardine or a small minnow plug just beyond the break. - **Lagos headlands and Ponta da Piedade area**: Rock marks and nearby reefs have produced nice sargos and the odd beefy robalo at dawn. Soft plastics and livebait near the wash, plus light jigs dropped onto the nearby structure, have both paid off. Night sessions along the Tavira and Cacela Velha stretches are quietly producing better‑than‑average bream and some surprise bass for those willing to fish into the small hours with crab and worm baits on light tackle. Overall, action isn’t explosive, but a thoughtful angler working the right tide windows, with fresh bait or well‑chosen lures, is going home with stories and a respectable feed. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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    4 分
  • Algarve Early Summer: Dawn Bass, Clear Water, and the Tide Bite
    2026/06/19
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Algarve fishing report. We’ve had a classic early‑summer pattern along the south coast. Light northerly to north‑westerly winds through the day, easing off toward evening, with air temps running mid‑20s Celsius on the shoreline and the usual strong sun when the clouds break. Seas are generally calm to slight along the south, with a bit more chop out toward Sagres on the west side when the wind pipes up in the afternoon. Sunrise is coming very early now, just after six in the morning, with sunset a bit after nine at night. That gives a long low‑light window: first light to about 9 a.m., and then again from 7 p.m. into dark have been the money hours. Midday is bright and slower unless you’re fishing deeper reefs or shaded structure. Tides along the south coast are running in a normal semi‑diurnal pattern with a decent range. The push of the incoming has been best for inshore predators, especially that last hour of the flood around rocky points, harbor mouths, and reef edges. The first of the ebb can also switch fish on where there’s good current and bait washing off the beaches. Inshore, the star of the show continues to be **robalo** (European seabass). Local anglers working the low, clear dawn tides around rocky beaches and river mouths have reported steady catches of schoolies with the odd better fish mixed in. Small surface walkers, slim stickbaits, and 90–120 mm minnow plugs in natural sardine or ayu patterns are doing the damage. On calm mornings, unweighted soft‑plastic shads and jerkbaits in white or pearl, fished slow and subtle, are deadly. Gilthead bream (**dourada**) and **sargos** are active on the sandy patches between rocks and near harbour walls. For these, bait is king: lugworm, Korean worm, shrimp, and small crab baits on light fluorocarbon leaders. Night tides have been giving the better class of fish, especially where you’ve got a bit of surf and broken ground. Offshore and on the reefs, boats working from Portimão, Alvor, and Vilamoura have been putting clients onto mixed bags: **besugos**, **pargos**, **badejo**, and plenty of smaller reef fish on baited rigs. Squid strips, sardine chunks, and cut mackerel are reliable. Vertical jigs and slow‑pitch jigs in the 60–120 g range, in pink, blue, and glow patterns, are producing when the current isn’t too fierce. With the water warming, expect more pelagic life pushing tight to the coast over the next weeks. Fish activity has generally been described as “steady but not silly” – you need to be there at the right times. Short feeding windows, especially around the turn of the tide at dawn and dusk. Scaling down leaders and lures has made a big difference in the clear water: 0.20–0.26 fluorocarbon for seabass lures, and smaller, more natural‑looking offerings when the sun is high. If you’re looking for a couple of **hot spots**: • The stretch between **Alvor and Praia do Vau** – plenty of mixed structure, shallow reefs, and current lines. Great for dawn seabass on topwaters and subsurface lures, and for night bait fishing for bream. • The **Culatra / Armona island channels off Olhão** – strong tidal flows, sandbars and drop‑offs that hold bass, bream, and occasionally bluefish. Work the edges of the channels on the flood with soft plastics and small metals; fish worm or shrimp baits on the bottom for dourada when the current eases. Best general advice right now: travel light, fish the low light, key on moving water, and don’t be afraid to drop lure size and slow your retrieve. The fish are there; they’re just making you earn it. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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    4 分
  • Algarve Early Summer: Seabass on the Rise, Waning Moon, Perfect Dawn and Dusk Conditions
    2026/06/18
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Algarve coastal fishing report. We’re sitting on a **waning gibbous moon**, with moderate tidal movement along the south coast. Around Faro, Olhão and Albufeira, the early morning low has been exposing plenty of structure, with the afternoon push bringing decent current along the outer sandbars. On the west coast, from Sagres up to Carrapateira, the swell has been gentle but with enough surge on the points to stir things up close to the rocks. Weather along most of the Algarve coast has been classic early summer: light northerly to northwesterly breezes in the morning, stiffening through the afternoon, and dropping again near sunset. Skies have been mostly clear, with warm days and cooler nights, making dawn and dusk the most comfortable – and productive – windows. Sunrise came early and sunset landed late, giving a long, bright day and pushing the best bites into low light. Inshore fish activity has picked up nicely. Along the beaches between Vilamoura and Armação de Pêra, surfcasters have been finding **robalo** (European seabass) on the first and second gutters at first light and just after sunset. Numbers aren’t crazy, but a handful of solid schoolies and the odd better fish have come to hand for anglers working the structure patiently. Inside the Ria Formosa, around the channels near Faro and Tavira, small boats and kayaks have been seeing mixed bags: **robalo**, **dourada** (gilthead bream) and **sargos** (seabream) on the edges of the channels and around the rock piles and old moorings. Reports along the marinas mention anglers picking two to six keeper fish on a tide when they stay mobile and match the current. From the rocks near Lagos and Sagres, night sessions have produced a few better seabass and some nice **sargos** for those fishing cleanly in the white water. The calmer swell has made more ledges accessible, but the clearer water means you need stealth, lighter leaders, and natural presentations. Offshore, the charter boats out of Portimão and Albufeira have been into **cavalas** (mackerel), **carapaus** (horse mackerel), and decent **pargos** and **bicas** on the reefs and marks in 40–80 meters. A few boats reported steady action with several dozen pelagics and a handful of good reef fish per trip when they stayed on the bait schools. For lures, this has been a **seabass plug** week. Slim, shallow-diving minnows in natural sardine or anchovy patterns, 11–14 cm, have been doing damage along the beaches and rocky points. Soft plastics on light jig heads – 10 to 20 grams – in white, pearl or olive over sandy bottoms are also producing, especially on a slow, steady retrieve with a few twitches. Metal jigs and casting spoons, 20–40 grams in silver or blue, have been the ticket for mackerel and horse mackerel when they push bait to the surface. On the bait side, **fresh sardinha** is still king. Whole or fillet strips for robalo and dourada from the surf, and small strips or chunks offshore over the reefs. **Camarão** (shrimp) and **casulo** (ragworm/arenícola) have been excellent for bream in the Ria Formosa channels and over inshore rock. Don’t overlook small live bait – a mackerel or bogue slow-trolled early or late can tempt a better bass near the drop-offs. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: – The stretch between **Praia da Falésia and Vilamoura**: early morning seabass along the gutters and small mackerel schools just off the beach when the tide is pushing. – The **rocky points around Ponta da Piedade near Lagos**: evening sessions with light swell have given solid bass and sargos where the current wraps around the headlands. That’s your Algarve fishing roundup from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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    4 分
  • Algarve Early Summer: Robalo, Anchovas and Perfect Dawn Tides
    2026/06/17
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Algarve fishing report. We’re sliding into a classic early‑summer pattern down here. Along the south coast from Sagres to Vila Real de Santo António, mornings have been calm, with a light northerly “nortada” building in the afternoon and easing again toward dark. Temperatures have been sitting in the low to mid‑20s on the coast, a bit hotter inland, and the water is a pleasant 19–21°C along most beaches and headlands. Sunrise is roughly mid‑morning clock time and sunset late evening, giving us long low‑light windows. First light to about two hours after, and then the last two hours before dark, have been the most productive. On the tide, we’ve had decent movement, with mid‑morning highs and late‑afternoon or evening lows depending on your exact spot along the coast. Plan to fish the last of the flooding tide and the first of the ebb for the best action on predators tight to structure. Fish activity has picked up nicely. Off the rocky points and quebradas around Sagres, Lagos and Ponta da Piedade, lure anglers have been pulling good numbers of **robalo** (European seabass) and some brutish **anchovas** (bluefish) when the wind pushes bait against the cliffs. Along the surf beaches around Alvor, Meia Praia, Armação de Pêra and Gale, the night tides have been giving mixed bags of seabass, **sargos** (white seabream) and the odd **corvina** for those soaking bait. In the rias and estuaries like Ria de Alvor and Ria Formosa, small boats and kayaks have been finding plenty of smaller seabass, **taínhas** (mullet), and some nice **douradas** (gilthead bream). The inshore reefs off Albufeira and Vilamoura have produced mixed reef fish: bream, wrasse and some decent **pargos** when the current is right. Best lures right now: – For robalo from shore, go with slim minnows and topwaters in natural baitfish colors at dawn and dusk, and small metal jigs or casting spoons when the wind is up and you need distance. – For anchova, tougher gear and wire traces with surface poppers or heavy stickbaits will survive their teeth and violent strikes. – In the estuaries, soft‑plastics on light jig heads, in white or olive, worked slowly along the bottom, are doing damage on seabass and dourada. Best baits: – Classic Algarve combo of fresh **sardinha** and **camarão** (shrimp) for seabass and bream. – **Casulo** and **americano** worms for more finicky sargos and douradas over sand patches. – For nighttime in the surf, a well‑presented strip of squid or cut sardine on a simple running rig is hard to beat. A couple of hot spots to consider: – The rocky stretch from Ponta da Piedade toward Porto de Mós: work the early flood with surface lures and minnows tight to the foam lines for seabass and bluefish. – The Ria de Alvor channels on the making tide at first light: perfect for light‑tackle soft‑plastic fishing for schoolie bass and the occasional better fish. As always, watch the swell on the cliffs and respect the Atlantic—no fish is worth a slip on the rocks. Keep an eye on local forecasts and port authority flags if you’re heading out by boat. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more Algarve fishing updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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    3 分
  • Algarve Early Summer: Pelagics, Bass, and the Golden Hour Window
    2026/06/16
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Algarve fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑summer pattern along the south coast from Vila Real de Santo António all the way to Sagres. Light northerly to north‑westerly winds most of the day, laying down towards evening, with air temps in the mid‑20s. Skies have been mostly clear, giving us bright days and cooler, comfortable nights. First light is hitting the water just after half‑five, with the sun dipping beyond the horizon a bit after eight‑thirty. That long golden window around dawn and the last hour of light have been the prime times. Tides are running moderate: a decent morning high, dropping to a mid‑day low, then pushing back up towards sunset. That incoming evening tide has really switched fish on along the beaches and rocky points. Offshore and inshore, the bluewater has been alive. Local skippers out of Albufeira and Vilamoura report good numbers of **sardine‑chasing pelagics** tight to the bait balls: bonito, small tuna, and the odd dorado further out. Closer to shore, there’ve been plenty of **horse mackerel, chub mackerel, and scad**, with occasional **sea bream** mixed in over rough ground and near reefs. On the surf scene from Quarteira through Armação de Pêra, the pick has been **gilthead bream and sargo**, plus a few **sea bass** working the shallows around first light. Night sessions have added **red mullet** and some chunky **rays** for those soaking bait beyond the first sandbar. Lure anglers have done well along the rocky ledges around Lagos and Sagres, with **sea bass** smashing surface plugs at dawn when there’s a bit of chop. When the sun gets higher, switching to slim, natural‑colored minnows and soft plastics worked slowly along the bottom has paid off. Best lures lately: - Slim hard‑body minnows in sardine, mackerel, and translucent patterns - Surface walkers and small poppers for low‑light bass - Jigheads with 10–15 cm soft plastics in white, pearl, and olive for working reefs and harbour mouths For bait, locals are sticking with the classics: - **Razor clam, lugworm, and Korean worm** for bream and bass in the surf - **Squid strips and sardine** on a simple running ledger for mackerel, rays, and general bottom fishing - Small **live baitfish** or fresh fillets when you can get them, especially around harbour mouths at dusk Two hot spots worth your time: 1. **Alvor Estuary and outer bar** On the flooding tide into evening, the channel edges and sandbanks here have been producing schoolie bass and bream. Work small soft plastics along the drop‑offs, or cast bait into the current lines where the water darkens. 2. **Cliffs and ledges west of Lagos towards Ponta da Piedade** Great for early‑morning lure fishing. A bit of swell and white water on the rocks really fires the bass up. Keep mobile, hit each pocket of broken water with a few casts, and move on. Overall, fish activity has been solid: not a fish‑every‑cast kind of week, but those putting in the hours around the right tides are seeing steady action and a few better‑sized fish each session. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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    3 分